On May 13, 6:06 am, "Gabriel Genellina" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > En Tue, 13 May 2008 07:30:44 -0300, Mike <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió: > > > > > > > I'm trying to use the feedparser module (http://www.feedparser.org/). > > > Is it possible to use this without running the setup program? > > > I don't see why not, seems like I'm missing something obvious. > > > My directory structure is: > > > myprogram.py > > /feedparser > > /feedparser.py > > > I know I can install the module in the modules directory but would like > > to > > avoid this for two reasons: I'm only using it for the one project so > > would > > like to keep it seperate, and if I move to a shared host I may not be > > allowed to install additional modules (not sure if this is correct > > though). > > The easiest way would be to put the single module feedparser.py in the > same directory as your program (I don't completely get your reasons not > to do that). OR put feedparser.py in some other directory that is already > listed in sys.path. OR add the directory containing feedparser.py to > sys.path, just at the beginning of your program. > > > I've tried: > > > import feedparser > > > import feedparser.feedparser > > > from feedparser import feedparser > > > What am I doing wrong? :) > > *IF* the directory 'feedparser' were a package (that is, if it contained a > file __init__.py), then that last import statement would be valid. But I > don't reccomend doing this; you're changing the module's environment. > > -- > Gabriel Genellina- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text -
The malicious thing to do would be spam Python servers with 'import Lib' and common locale-specific-language short words for techs: import biblio, import server--- things we might all want really small-to-zero numbers of... if in numbers... and such as columns of instancy (the currency), from the instant of instant message. So, can you tank my laptop, or can I go tanking the town? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list